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Wall St. climbs as tech boosts the market, while markets weigh down commodity sales and earnings

Wall Street's major indexes rose on Monday, as memory chipmakers and heavyweight stocks?led a recovery from losses caused by the sharp drop in precious metals prices.

The 'S&P 500' ended three consecutive daily losses. This was after a session in which gold and silver prices fell so much that investors were forced to unwind their leveraged bets.

Sandisk, a memory-related stock, soared by 16%. Seagate rose by 5.8%. Western Digital rose 7.8%. This is a continuation of the strong momentum that began in January and continued through late-2025.

Market participants stated that the focus of the market was on positioning for what they expect to be the busiest week in earnings and important economic indicators.

The PMI data revealed that U.S. manufacturing activity increased for the first time since a year ago in January.

We're entering a new work week and there are?plenty catalysts ahead of us. The markets have stabilized. Art Hogan, of B. Riley Wealth, said that in the short term we have priced out some of our concerns.

The CBOE VIX volatility index fell 1.27 points, to 16.17. It had reached a high of nearly two weeks earlier in the session.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 490.04 points, or 1%, to 49.382.51 at?12:09 pm ET. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 490.04 or 1% to 49,382.51 at 12:09 p.m. ET. The S&P 500 rose 45.73 points or 0.66% to 6,984.82, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 175.21?points or 0.75% to 23,637.01.

Geopolitical tensions caused some selloffs, but all three indexes posted gains for January. The S&P broke the 7,000 mark for the first-time on the back of resilient earnings and bets made on AI-linked gains.

Apple and Amazon both rose more than 2% on Monday.

Microsoft's share price, on the other hand, fell by 1.1% Friday, marking its biggest weekly decline since March 2020 after disappointing cloud revenue.

The selling indicates that investors' patience is wearing thin due to the staggering capital expenditure plans of Big Tech. This puts more pressure on companies to convert those billions in real, measurable profits to justify their high valuations.

Disney's shares fell by 5.3%, despite the fact that it had posted first-quarter profits above Wall Street expectations.

Alphabet Amazon AMD is among the S&P 500 companies that are due to report their earnings this week.

The Russell 2000 small-cap index rose?more than 1 percent, rebounding from a low of a month.

Oracle's stock rose 2.4% as Wall Street analysts praised its $50 billion fundraising program for easing concerns about its ability to fund a massive expansion of its data centers.

S&P 500 Energy Sector Index fell 1.4% after U.S. president Donald Trump said Iran is "seriously speaking" with Washington. These comments hinted at a de-escalation, and eased concerns about supply disruptions.

Low energy prices have boosted airline stocks. United shares rose by 5.5% while JetBlue?jumped around 6%. Delta and Southwest both rose by 4.9% and 3.5% respectively.

The House of Representatives has taken up legislation to end a partial shutdown of the government entered on Saturday. A final vote is expected on Tuesday.

Due to the partial government shutdown, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has announced that the highly anticipated employment report for the month of January will not be released until Friday. Reporting by Pranav Kahyap in Bengaluru and Twesha Dkshit; editing by Shinjini Ganuli and Shilpa Majumdar

(source: Reuters)